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XII.
Those who are unskilled in letters cannot be judges.
XIII.
A ward is naturally bound even without the authority of a tutor.
XIV.
Minors are rightly bound without their curators.
XV.
All servitudes are acquired by prescription of long time, the distinction of the Doctors between continuous and discontinuous being rejected as erroneous.
XVI.
In the price of buying and selling, it is naturally permitted for the contracting parties to circumvent one another.
XVII.
Dissensus in the subject matter vitiates a sale, but not a stipulation.
XVIII.
We firmly maintain that once a purchase is perfected, it is not permitted to withdraw from it, not even with the loss of earnest money.
XIX.
If a seller has the capacity to deliver the object, he can be compelled precisely to deliver it by the action arising from the purchase.
XX.
It is not necessary for the reward to consist of counted money for it to be a hiring.
XXI.
Things brought and carried into an urban estate are tacitly bound as a pledge, but not those brought into a rural estate.